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CIA-MI6 planned to assassinate Syrian leaders in 1957
By Jean Shaoul
6 October 2003
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It is hardly surprising that the US vetoed, and Britain abstained
from, the United Nations Security Council resolution condemning
Israels recent threat to murder Yasser Arafat. Recently
published papers show that assassinations have been part of the
US and Britains foreign policy operations in the Middle
East.
An article in the Guardian newspaper on Saturday, September
27, outlined plans by Americas CIA and Britains MI6
security forces to overthrow the Syrian government, which was
increasingly orientating towards Moscow, and assassinate three
of its key leaders. The plan had received approval from the very
top of the political establishment: US president Dwight Eisenhower
and British prime minister Harold Macmillan.
One important difference between the 1957 plan and Israels
recent declaration should be noted: the former was kept closely
under wraps and known to only a select few, not announced publicly,
and without fear of international censure as with Israel deputy
prime minister Ehud Olmerts threat to Arafat.
Disclosure of the 1957 paper does provide an opportunity to
review the role of US and British imperialism in the Middle East.
The US and Britains covert intervention in Syria to secure
control of the regions oil was only one of numerous such
operations in the Middle East in the 1950s. Throughout the postwar
period, London and Washington had sought to undermine popular
nationalist governments in the Middle East that threatened their
strategic and economic interests:
* The US and Britain had organised the overthrow of the nationalist
Iranian government of Mohammed Mossadegh in 1953.
* Britain had attempted several times to assassinate President
Nasser of Egypt, who had ejected the British military base, nationalised
the Suez Canal, and secured aid from the Soviet Union to build
the Aswan High Dam.
* Britain, France and Israel had invaded Egypt in 1956 in an
attempt to seize the Canal, overthrow Nasser, and install a more
pliant regime.
While the US, which was determined to replace Britain as the
dominant power in the Middle East, forced the British and French
to pull out of Egypt, it nevertheless joined the Anglo-French
economic blockade of the country. Thus, the Suez war discredited
all the Western imperialist powers and drove Egypt and other Arab
regimes closer to Moscow.
In March 1957, the US Congress passed what became known as
the Eisenhower Doctrine, which named international
communism as the greatest threat to the region and promised
financial help to any country that tried to resist it. It authorised
the president to send US troops to any Middle East country that
asked for help against communist aggression.
When a power struggle broke out a few weeks later in Jordan
between King Hussein and his pro-Nasser government, which sought
to establish diplomatic links with the Soviet Union, the US despatched
the Sixth Fleet to the eastern Mediterranean in a show of support
and helped Hussein to overthrow his own government. In Lebanon,
the US embassy and the CIA gave assistance to the fascistic pro-Chamoun
forces in the parliamentary elections.
Although Syria itself had little oil, as the centre of Arab
nationalism it played a key political role in the region and controlled
the Wests access to Iraqs northern oilfields: the
pipeline transporting Iraqs oil to Turkey and the Mediterranean
flowed through Syria. It would have no truck with the Baghdad
Pact, the alliance of pro-Western states in the Middle East against
the Soviet Union, and had refused to accept the Eisenhower Doctrine.
In August 1957, at the height of the Cold War, Syria signed
an agreement with Moscow for military and economic aid, recognised
China, and appointed Afif al-Bizri, an officer with Stalinist
sympathies, as the armed forces chief of staff.
The Baghdad Pact countries, at a meeting in Ankara attended
by senior State Department official Loy Henderson, agreed that
the present regime in Syria had to go; otherwise the takeover
by the Communists would be complete. The Soviet Union warned
the West against intervening in Syria as Turkish troops massed
along the border with Syria, generating a huge international crisis.
It has long been known that the US and British governments
were actively plotting a regime change to prevent Syria falling
within Moscows sphere of influence. But the full extent
of the skullduggery and the fact that it included assassinations
were not known.
Now the Guardian article provides documentary evidence
of the conspiracy. It cites a report, found by Matthew Jones,
a specialist in British and US postwar foreign policy at the University
of London, in the private papers of Duncan Sandys, Macmillans
defence secretary, setting out the nuts and bolts of the plan,
including the proposed assassinations.
The document was drawn up in Washington by the top echelons
of the CIA and the Secret Intelligence Service (SIS), as MI6 was
then called. It shows that they planned to use agents provocateurs
to launch a series of incidents. These events would create political
turmoil to provide a pretext by Syrias pro-Western neighbours
to mount an invasion in support of the governments right-wing
opponents. A key element of the plan was to assassinate three
leading figures: Abd al-Hamid, head of Syrian military intelligence,
Afif al-Bizri, the pro-Soviet chief of staff, and Khalid Bakdash,
leader of the Syrian Communist Party.
The report was quite plain. It stated, In order to facilitate
the action of liberative forces, reduce the capabilities of the
Syrian regime to organise and direct its military actions, to
hold losses and destruction to a minimum, and to bring about desired
action in the shortest possible time, a special effort should
be made to eliminate certain key individuals. The removal
should be accomplished early in the course of the uprising and
intervention and in the light of the circumstances existing at
the time [emphasis added].
Once a political decision is reached to proceed with
internal disturbances in Syria, CIA is prepared, and SIS [MI6]
will attempt, to mount minor sabotage and coup de main incidents
within Syria, working through contacts with individuals.
The two services should consult, as appropriate, to avoid
overlapping or interfering with each others activities...
Incidents should not be concentrated in Damascus; the operation
should not be overdone; and to the extent possible care should
be taken to avoid causing key leaders of the Syrian regime to
take additional personal protection measures.
According to the Guardian, once the general climate
of fear had been created, they would stage frontier incidents
and border clashes to provide a pretext for Iraq and Jordan, then
under British tutelage, to invade. Syria had to be made
to appear as the sponsor of plots, sabotage and violence directed
against neighbouring governments, the report said.
It went on to say, CIA and SIS should use their capabilities
in both the psychological and action fields to augment tension.
In other words, they should organise sabotage, national
conspiracies and various strong arm activities in Jordan,
Lebanon and Iraq, responsibility for which were to be attributed
to Damascus. These were operations in which the special political
action section of the SIS specialised during the 1940s and 1950s,
before it supposedly became a purely intelligence-gathering agency.
A Free Syria Committee should be funded and political
factions with paramilitary or other actionist capabilities
in Syria should be armed. The CIA and MI6 should stir up trouble
and encourage uprisings against the government by the Druze minority
in the south and the Muslim Brotherhood in Damascus. They should
help to free political prisoners in the notorious Mezza prison.
The aim was to replace the government that had the backing
of both the Baathists and Moscow with one that was pro-Western.
Such a regime would, the report recognised, be unpopular and would
probably need to rely first upon repressive measures and arbitrary
exercise of power.
In the event, the plan came to nothing. Faced with the possibility
of Turkey invoking the Eisenhower Doctrine and calling for US
support against Syria, Egypts president Nasser railed against
the US and its lackeys in the Arab world, particularly Iraq and
Jordan, and despatched a small military contingent to Syria. This
had the desired effect. Nasser was seen as the defender of Arab
nationalism, while the Jordanian and Iraqi governments were widely
reviled as craven supporters of Western imperialism at the expense
of their own people.
With popular opinion vehemently against them, the pro-imperialist
governments were forced to do an about-face to save their political
skins. The Jordanian foreign minister denied that it had ever
been Jordans intention to interfere in Syrias domestic
affairs, while Nuri al-Said, the Iraqi prime minister, lied and
said there was complete understanding with the Syrian President.
The Saudi king urged Eisenhower to proceed with caution and moderation.
Without political cover from the Arab regimes, a Turkish invasion
of Syria would have been unacceptable, so the CIA-MI6 plans fell
apart.
See Also:
Why is Israel threatening
to murder Arafat?
[16 September 2003]
CIA death squads operating
in Iraq
[8 April 2003]
Sunday Times alleges
Britains MI6 played role in Gadhaffi assassination attempt
[15 February 2000]
CIA and MI6 plot
to assassinate Hussein revealed
[19 February 1998]
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